History, asked by riyagoyal4226, 8 months ago

"Hitler was a powerful speaker. His passion and his words moved people." Justify with any four arguments on favour of the statement​

Answers

Answered by laxminarayanlakhawat
10

Answer:

Hitler was a powerful dictator of Germany. He was a good speaker and give good speech to all people. He ready children's for fighting. He give medals to mother's of children according the numbers of children

Explanation:

Answered by mradul91
4

Answer:

I know that men are won over less by the written than by the spoken word, that every great movement on this earth owes its growth to great orators and not to great writers." —Adolf Hitler, "Mein Kampf," 1925

One of the world's most influential orators created the largest German political party, conquered a dozen nations, and slaughtered as many as 21 million people during his brutal 12-year Third Reich.

In more than 5,000 persuasive speeches, Nazi leader Adolf Hitler bewitched his audiences and promised them that his empire would reign for a thousand years.

Professor Bruce Loebs, who has taught a class called the Rhetoric of Hitler and Churchill for the past 46 years at Idaho State University, credits the Führer's oratory success to his charisma.

"He learned how to become a charismatic speaker, and people, for whatever reason, became enamored with him," Loebs told Business Insider.

"People were most willing to follow him, because he seemed to have the right answers in a time of enormous economic upheaval.

Plagued with enormous World War I-related reparations in addition to an increasingly depressed global economy, Germany's economic environment supported Hitler's rise in the 1930s.

Hitler took advantage of the brewing discontent and found himself at the forefront of an opportunistic political ideology, the National Socialist German Workers' party.

Before the Nazis' rapid ascent to the world stage, Hitler's party was largely unknown, winning a trivial 3% of votes in Germany's 1924 elections.

"When Hitler decided to compete in the Reichstag," or German parliament, "he knew that meant that he had to give speeches and that meant that he had to speak to as many people as he could in order to get votes," Loebs told Business Insider.

Eight years later, the Nazis were the largest party in the Reichstag. By 1934, Hitler and his frightening political agenda were leading the German government.

In short, as historian Robert Waite writes: "Hitler was Nazidom. Seldom in the history of western civilization has so much depended on one man's personality. He created his own political theory and a government that could not exist without him."

Before the Nazis' rapid ascent to the world stage, Hitler's party was largely unknown, winning a trivial 3% of votes in Germany's 1924 elections.

"When Hitler decided to compete in the Reichstag," or German parliament, "he knew that meant that he had to give speeches and that meant that he had to speak to as many people as he could in order to get votes," Loebs told Business Insider.

Eight years later, the Nazis were the largest party in the Reichstag. By 1934, Hitler and his frightening political agenda were leading the German government.

In short, as historian Robert Waite writes: "Hitler was Nazidom. Seldom in the history of western civilization has so much depended on one man's personality. He created his own political theory and a government that could not exist without him."

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